Eating at Funaya Shokudo in Ine, Kyoto Japan

Eating at Funaya Shokudo in Ine, Kyoto Japan

Ine is a tiny fishing city in the north of Kyoto Prefecture, and it took a bit of time to visit it, but I always wanted to do that.

When I got there, the first thing I saw was the Tourist Information Center of Ine, a big building right next to the water.Some people walked around it.

Tourists near wooden building in Ine

Ine is known for its funaya, which are old boathouses built right at the edge of the bay, and about 230 of them line up all along the shore.

Lunch by the Bay at Funaya Shokudo in Ine, Kyoto

Ine Tourist Information entrance

The sign at Funaya Shokudo showed pictures of dishes with seafood, like fish and shrimp on them, together with signs about open hours for lunch. I walked closer to check that out.

Seafood restaurant menu display

I went in and found a place to sit.

Window signs outside a cozy shop

In the menu was a list of different dishes, such as boiled fish, fried fish, grilled eel, fresh squid and shabu-shabu from yellowtail. Some items were already sold out, which made sense, because Funaya Shokudo is a little place and they use whatever fresh fish that arrives during the day.

Assorted Japanese set meal menu

Restaurant menu with food images

You order by way of a touchscreen, which you now find a lot of in Japanese restaurants.

Digital menu displaying meal options

Digital menu with sashimi options

The list of drinks had Asahi beer, chuhai lemon, local sake, oolong tea, cola and coffee.

Digital menu screen with beverage options

Touchscreen drinks menu with prices

The dining room had long tables and big windows, through which you could see the bay and the funaya boathouses along the water.

Then we waited for the food.

Empty cafe overlooking traditional rooftops

Cozy cafe counter with staff preparing

From my seat, the view was over the bay with boats parked right next to the houses. The boathouses of Ine have the water on the ground floor, where they keep the boats, and the living rooms are up, so everything is built right at the water’s edge. Here it was really calm and quiet with green hills in the background.

Scenic waterfront and traditional houses

The food arrived and it looked cool. The sashimi lay on a dish shaped as a boat, with thick slices of fresh fish together with wasabi, plus bowls of rice, noodles and vegetables around it. Funaya Shokudo gets their fish right from Ine Bay, so everything was very fresh.

The fish looked clean and the slices thick, different than at Sushi Naritaya in Arashiyama, where they served the fish as sushi on rice.

Japanese boat platter with sashimi

The other dishes were even better.

Sashimi lunch with ocean view

There was cut fish, udon noodles, soup, cooked fish with green onions, mushrooms and a pot for shabu-shabu. The shabu-shabu from yellowtail is a favorite winter dish in that area of Kyoto, because the yellowtail, called buri in Japanese, is caught fresh in the Sea of Japan during the cold months. The steam from the pot smelled really good and the fish slices were thin enough to cook fast, when you dip them in.

Japanese meal with sashimi and udon

Traditional Japanese meal with sashimi

I also got a bowl with fish slices and wasabi on rice, together with grilled fish and rolled egg beside it.

Japanese dish with fish and rice bowl

The sashimi on another plate came with mushrooms and dipping sauce, plus miso soup. Everything had clean and light tastes, as seafood should taste when it is that fresh. It was a totally different style of Kyoto meal than the one that I tasted at Kamanza in Ninenzaka, where I tried unagi.

Assorted Japanese dishes on a table

The nice bay view from the window made the whole meal feel slow and calm, without any rush. Ine does not get as many tourists as central Kyoto, so Funaya Shokudo stayed pretty quiet and the food just kept arriving.

Japanese meal with harbor view

I kept dipping and eating until everything was gone.

Assorted Japanese dishes by window view

Author

  • Junpei

    Hi, I am Junpei, the owner of JourneyRambler.com! In this blog, I will share my personalized travel experience. This blog will record and share every moment in my journey. Hope you find this blog useful for your travel guidance.

Leave a Comment